Modifiers:
- A modifier is a word or a group of words that gives information about a noun or a verb. It modifies or changes the meaning of a noun or a verb.
Examples:
- The man talking on the phone is my boss.
- We have a car of the same design.
Misplaced Modifiers:
- When a modifier is placed a little far away from the word or words it modifies in the sentence, it creates ambiguity and modifies the wrong word or words. That is called a misplaced modifier.
- It is placed a little far away from the word or words it modifies, and because of that it is called a misplaced modifier.
- Example:
“Getting ready for the office, the food was eaten by Jon in a hurry.”
- Here the phrase “getting ready for the office intended to modify the noun “Jon.” But by mistake in this sentence that phrase modifying the word “food.”
- Correct one: “Getting ready for the office, Jon ate the food in hurry.”
- Let’s see how misplaced modifiers change the meaning of the sentence.
- Only I want to marry her.
- I want to marry only her.
- I only want to marry her.
- So, we have some limiting modifiers.
- Limiting modifiers that limit the meaning of the word or words they modify.
- Examples: Only, Just, Nearly, Hardly, Almost, etc.
- Another kind of misplaced modifier is squinting modifier.
- When a modifier conveys two different meaning, it is called a squinting modifier.
- Examples:
- “Insulting people sometimes maligns your image.”
Meaning:
- Modifies the verb Insulting, telling the frequency.
- Modifies the verb Maligns, telling the frequency.
- A misplaced modifier is generally one of the modifiers:
- Preposition phrase
- Participle phrase
- Present participle phrase
- Past participle phrase
- Relative clause
- A phrase is a meaningful sequence of two or more words that work as a unit in a sentence.
- In these sentences, the related words form a sentence that has either a subject or a predicate.
- So, these set of words are called phrases.
- It contains neither subject nor a verb.
- It is not complete sentences in itself.
Clauses:
A Clause is a group of related words that has both the subject and predicate (verb).
There are two types of clauses,
- Dependent
- Independent
Dependent Clause:
- Cannot stand alone as its own sentence, because it depends upon something else to give it a meaning.
- When written as a sentence, is a fragment.
- Begins with a subordinating conjunction.
Independent Clause:
- An independent clause is a clause that can stand on its own as a sentence because it has a complete thought expressed.
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